Four and a half stars for this delightful little story of a girl who knows what she wants, if not how to get it. She also knows what she doesn't want, and won't put up with. Sophie is older than her age, but that's not unusual for the only girl (and one who is not a spoiled princess), used to holding her own against older brothers. Her relationship with the animals she loves, particularly the snail, is charming without being sweetie-sweet, and the illustrations depict real children doing real things. The artist catches not only their features but their feelings in a way that made me laugh with recognition.
The only drawback is that Sophie is written as a four-year-old who has never gone to school, and yet she can write and sort of spell. OK, so she spells "snails" as "SNALES" but I find that a bit advanced; even though by age 6 I was reading at a 5th grade level, the motor skills of writing took me a few years to master. I learned to read at age 3 because I had a lot of older siblings who liked to "play school" and taught me my letters, and my mother read aloud to me while running her finger along under the words. Writing, however, was left for school. Unless mum is teaching her at home (and there's nothing to imply that mum pays much attention to Sophie at all beyond expecting her to behave), how would a four year old learn to write by herself?
I enjoyed Sophie's payback of dreadful, spoiled-princess Dawn; my inner four-year-old cheered!